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1.
The mechanism of oxidation of two related sclerotizing precursors—N-acetyldopamine and N-acetylnorepinephrine—by the cuticular phenoloxidase from Sarcophaga bullata was studied and compared with mushroom tyrosinase-mediated oxidation. While the fungal enzyme readily generated the quinone products from both of these catecholamine derivatives, sarcophagid enzyme converted N-acetyldopamine to a quinone methide derivative, which was subsequently bound to the cuticle with the regeneration of o-dihydroxy phenolic function as outlined in an earlier publication [Sugumaran: Arch Insect Biochem Physiol, 8, 73 (1988)]. However, it converted N-acetylnorepinephrine to its quinone and not to the quinone methide derivative. Proteolytic digests of N-acetyldopamine-treated cuticle liberated peptides that had covalently bound catechols, while N-acetylnorepinephrine-treated cuticle did not release such peptides. Acid hydrolysis of N-acetyldopamine-treated cuticle, but not N-acetylnorepinephrine-treated cuticle liberated 2-hydroxy-3′,4′-dihydroxyacetophenone and arterenone. These results further confirm the unique conversion of N-acetyldopamine to its corresponding quinone methide derivative and N-acetylnorepinephrine to its quinone derivative by the cuticular phen-oloxidase. Significance of this differential mechanism of oxidation for sclerotization of insect cuticle is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
S J Saul  M Sugumaran 《FEBS letters》1989,255(2):340-344
The enzyme system causing the side chain desaturation of the sclerotizing precursor, N-acetyldopamine (NADA), was solubilized from the larval cuticle of Sarcophaga bullata and resolved into three components. The first enzyme, phenoloxidase, catalyzed conversion of NADA to NADA quinone and provided it for the second enzyme (NADA quinone isomerase), which makes the highly unstable NADA quinone methide. Quinone methide was hydrated rapidly and nonenzymatically to form N-acetylnorepinephrine. In addition, it also served as the substrate for the last enzyme, quinone methide tautomerase, which converted it to 1,2-dehydro-NADA. Reconstitution of NADA side chain desaturase activity was achieved by mixing the last enzyme fraction with NADA quinone isomerase, obtained from the hemolymph of the same organism, and mushroom tyrosinase. Therefore, NADA side chain desaturation observed in insects is caused by the combined action of three enzymes rather than the action of a single specific NADA desaturase, as previously thought.  相似文献   

3.
The mechanism of formation of quinone methide from the sclerotizing precursor N-acetyldopamine (NADA) was studied using three different cuticular enzyme systems viz. Sarcophaga bullata larval cuticle, Manduca sexta pharate pupae, and Periplaneta americana presclerotized adult cuticle. All three cuticular samples readily oxidized NADA. During the enzyme-catalyzed oxidation, the majority of NADA oxidized became bound covalently to the cuticle through the side chain with the retention of o-diphenolic function, while a minor amount was recovered as N-acetylnorepinephrine (NANE). Cuticle treated with NADA readily released 2-hydroxy-3′,4′-dihydroxyacetophenone on mild acid hydrolysis confirming the operation of quinone methide sclerotization. Attempts to demonstrate the direct formation of NADA-quinone methide by trapping experiments with N-acetylcysteine surprisingly yielded NADA-quinone-N-acetylcysteine adduct rather than the expected NADA-quinone methide-N-acetylcysteine adduct. These results are indicative of NADA oxidation to NADA-quinone and its subsequent isomerization to NADA-quinone methide. Accordingly, all three cuticular samples exhibited the presence of an isomerase, which catalyzed the conversion of NADA-quinone to NADA-quinone methide as evidenced by the formation of NANE—the water adduct of quinone methide. Thus, in association with phenoloxidase, newly discovered quinone methide isomerase seems to generate quinone methides and provide them for quinone methide sclerotization.  相似文献   

4.
The catabolic fate of 3,4-dihydroxyphenethyl alcohol (DHPA) and 3,4-dihydroxyphenylethyl glycol (DHPG) in insect cuticle was determined for the first time using cuticular enzyme(s) from Sarcophaga bullata and compared with mushroom tyrosinase-medicated oxidation. Mushroom tyrosinase converted both DHPA and DHPG to their corresponding quinone derivatives, while cuticular enzyme(s) partly converted DHPA to DHPG. Cuticular enzyme(s)-mediated oxidation of DHPA also accompanied the covalent binding of DHPA to the cuticle. Cuticle-DHPA adducts, upon pronase digestion, released peptides that had bound catechols. 3,4-Dihydroxyphenyl-acetaldehyde, the expected product of side chain desaturation of DHPA, was not formed at all. The presence of N-acetylcysteine, a quinone trap, in the reaction mixture containing DHPA and cuticle resulted in the generation of DHPA-quinone-N-acetylcysteine adduct and total inhibition of DHPG formation. The insect enzyme(s) converted DHPG to its quinone at high substrate concentration and to 2-hydroxy-3′,4′-dihydroxyacetophenone at low concentration. They converted exogenously added DHPA-quinone to DHPG, but acted sluggishly on DHPG-quinone. These results are consistent with the enzymatic transformations of phenoloxidase-generated quinones to quinone methides and subsequent nonenzymatic transformation of the latter to the observed products. Thus, quinone methide formation in insect cuticle seems to be caused by the combined action of two enzymes, phenoloxidase and quinone tautomerase, rather than the action of quinone methide-generating phenoloxidase (Sugumaran: Arch Insect Biochem Physiol 8, 73–88, 1988). It is proposed that DHPA and DHPG in combination can be used effectively to examine the participation of (1) quinone, (2) quinone methide, and (3) dehydro derivative intermediates in the metabolism of 4-alkylcatechols for cuticular sclerotization.  相似文献   

5.
M Sugumaran  S Saul  V Semensi 《FEBS letters》1989,252(1-2):135-138
We have demonstrated that quinone methide formation is an important aspect of insect physiology and proposed that enzymatically generated quinone methides react nonenzymatically with water or other nucleophiles to form Michael-1,6-addition products [(1988) Adv. Insect Physiol. 21, 179-231; (1989) J. Cell. Biochem. suppl. 13C, 58]. Using a purified o-quinone isomerase from the larval cuticle of Sacrophaga bullata and mushroom tyrosinase, we now demonstrate that transiently formed N-acetyldopamine quinone methide from N-acetyldopamine can be trapped by methanol to produce beta-methoxy N-acetyldopamine. The methanol adduct thus formed was found to be a racemic mixture and can be resolved into the optical isomers on cyclodextrin chiral column. These results confirm our contention that enzymatically generated quinone methides are nonenzymatically and nonstereoselectively transformed to Michael-1,6-adducts by reaction with water or other nucleophiles.  相似文献   

6.
M Sugumaran  V Semensi  H Dali  S Saul 《FEBS letters》1989,255(2):345-349
We have recently demonstrated that the side chain hydroxylation of N-acetyldopamine and related compounds observed in several insects is caused by a two-enzyme system catalyzing the initial oxidation of catecholamine derivatives and subsequent isomerization of the resultant quinones to isomeric quinone methides, which undergo rapid nonenzymatic hydration to yield the observed products [Saul, S.J. and Sugumaran, M. (1989) FEBS Lett. 249, 155-158]. During our studies on o-quinone/p-quinone methide tautomerase, we observed that quinone methides are also produced nonenzymatically slowly, under physiological conditions. The quinone methide derived from N-acetyldopamine was hydrated to yield N-acetylnorepinephrine as the stable product as originally shown by Senoh and Witkop [(1959) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 81, 6222-6231], while the isomeric quinone methide from dihydrocaffeiyl methylamide exhibited a new reaction to form caffeiyl amide as the stable product. The identity of this product was established by UV and IR spectral studies and by chemical synthesis. We could not find any evidence of intramolecular cyclization of N-acetyldopamine quinone to iminochrome-type compound(s). The importance of quinone methides in these reactions is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
The mechanism of oxidation of 1,2-dehydro-N-acetyldopamine (dehydro NADA) was examined to resolve the controversy between our group and Andersen's group regarding the reactive species involved in β-sclerotization. While Andersen has indicated that dehydro NADA quinone is the β-sclerotizing agent [Andersen, 1989], we have proposed quinone methides as the reactive species for this process [Sugumaran, 1987; Sugumaran, 1988]. Since dehydro NADA quinone has not been isolated or identified till to date, we studied the enzymatic oxidation of dehydro NADA in the presence of quinone traps to characterize this intermediate. Accordingly, both N-acetylcysteine and o-phenylenediamine readily trapped the transiently formed dehydro NADA quinone as quinone adducts. Interestingly, when the enzymatic oxidation was performed in the presence of o-aminophenol or different catechols, adduct formation between the dehydro NADA side chain and the additives had occurred. The structure of the adducts is in conformity with the generation and reactions of dehydro NADA quinone methide (or its radical). This, coupled with the fact that 4-hydroxyl or amino-substituted quinones instantly transformed into p-quinonoid structure, indicates that dehydro NADA quinone is only a transient intermediate and that it is the dehydro NADA quinone methide that is the thermodynamically stable product. However, since this compound is chemically more reactive due to the presence of both quinone methide and acylimine structure on it, the two side chain carbon atoms are “activated.” Based on these considerations, it is suggested that the quinone methide derived from dehydro NADA is the reactive species responsible for cross-link formation between dehydro NADA and cuticular components during β-sclerotization.  相似文献   

8.
S J Saul  M Sugumaran 《FEBS letters》1989,251(1-2):69-73
A novel enzyme system that desaturates the side chain of the catecholamine derivative, N-acetyldopamine (NADA), was isolated and characterized from the larval cuticle of Sarcophaga bullata. The NADA desaturase system which converts NADA to 1,2-dehydro-NADA, surprisingly, does not resemble dehydrogenases such as succinate dehydrogenase. It uniquely performs the desaturation reaction by oxidizing NADA to its corresponding quinone and subsequently converting the resultant quinone to 1,2-dehydro-NADA via NADA quinone methide. Accordingly, desaturase enzyme preparation contained both o-diphenoloxidase activity and NADA quinone:NADA quinone methide isomerase activity. In addition, inhibition studies as well as trapping experiments also confirmed the obligatory formation of NADA quinone as the transient intermediate of the NADA desaturation. It is the first report of a cell-free system causing the side chain desaturation of any catecholamine derivative.  相似文献   

9.
Proteins solubilized from the pharate cuticle of Manduca sexta were fractionated by ammonium sulfate precipitation and activated by the endogenous enzymes. The activated fraction readily converted exogenously supplied N-acetyldopamine (NADA) to N-acetylnorepinephrine (NANE). Either heat treatment (70 degrees C for 10 min) or addition of phenylthiourea (2.5 microM) caused total inhibition of the side chain hydroxylation. If chemically prepared NADA quinone was supplied instead of NADA to the enzyme solution containing phenylthiourea, it was converted to NANE. Presence of a quinone trap such as N-acetylcysteine in the NADA-cuticular enzyme reaction not only prevented the accumulation of NADA quinone, but also abolished NANE production. In such reaction mixtures, the formation of a new compound characterized as NADA-quinone-N-acetylcysteine adduct could be readily witnessed. These studies indicate that NADA quinone is an intermediate during the side chain hydroxylation of NADA by Manduca cuticular enzyme(s). Since such a conversion calls for the isomerization of NADA quinone to NADA quinone methide and subsequent hydration of NADA quinone methide, attempts were also made to trap the latter compound by performing the enzymatic reaction in methanol. These attempts resulted in the isolation of beta-methoxy NADA (NADA quinone methide methanol adduct) as an additional product. Similarly, when the N-beta-alanyldopamine (NBAD)-Manduca enzyme reaction was carried out in the presence of L-kynurenine, two diastereoisomers of NBAD quinone methide-kynurenine adduct (= papiliochrome IIa and IIb) could be isolated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
In accordance with our earlier results, quinone methide formation was confirmed to be the major pathway for the oxidation of N-acetyldopamine (NADA) by cuticle-bound enzymes from Sarcophaga bullata larvae. In addition, with the use of a newly developed HPLC separation condition and cuticle prepared by gentle procedures, it could be demonstrated that 1, 2-dehydro-NADA and its dimeric oxidation products are also generated in the reaction mixture containing a high concentration of NADA albeit at a much lower amount than the NADA quinone methide water adduct, viz., N-acetylnorepinephrine (NANE). By using different buffers, it was also possible to establish the accumulation of NADA quinone in reaction mixtures containing NADA and cuticle. That the 1,2-dehydro-NADA formation is due to the action of a NADA desaturase system was established by pH and temperature studies and by differential inhibition of NANE production. Of the various cuticle examined, adult cuticle of Locusta migratoria, presclerotized cuticle of Periplaneta americana, and white puparial cases of Drosophila melanogaster exhibited more NADA desaturase activity than NANE generating activity, while the reverse was observed with the larval cuticle of Tenebrio molitor and pharate pupal cuticle of Manduca sexta. These studies indicate that both NADA quinone methide and 1, 2-dehydro NADA are formed during enzymatic activation of NADA in insect cuticle. Based on these results, a unified mechanism for β-sclerotization involving quinone methides as the reactive species is presented.  相似文献   

11.
The properties of cuticular enzymes involved in sclerotization of Drosophila melanogaster puparium were examined. The cuticle-bound phenoloxidase from the white puparium exhibited a pH optimum of 6.5 in phosphate buffer and oxidized a variety of catecholic substrates such as 4-methylcatechol, N-beta-alanyldopamine, dopa, dopamine, N-acetyldopamine, catechol, norepinephrine, 3,4-dihydroxyphenylglycol, 3,4-dihydroxybenzoic acid, and 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid. Phenoloxidase inhibitors such as potassium cyanide and sodium fluoride inhibited the enzyme activity drastically, but phenylthiourea showed marginal inhibition only. This result, coupled with the fact that syringaldazine served as the substrate for the insoluble enzyme, confirmed that cuticular phenoloxidase is of the "laccase" type. In addition, we also examined the mode of synthesis of the sclerotizing precursor, 1,2-dehydro-N-acetyldopamine. Our results indicate that this catecholamine derivative is biosynthesized from N-acetyldopamine through the intermediate formation of N-acetyldopamine quinone and N-acetyldopamine quinone methide as established for Sarcophaga bullata [Saul, S. and Sugumaran, M., F.E.B.S. Letters 251, 69-73 (1989)]. Accordingly, successful solubilization and fractionation of cuticular enzymes involved in the introduction of a double bond in the side chain of N-acetyldopamine indicated that they included o-diphenoloxidase, 4-alkyl-o-quinone:p-quinone methide isomerase, and N-acetyldopamine quinone methide:dehydro N-acetyldopamine isomerase and not any side chain desaturase.  相似文献   

12.
The metabolism of N-beta-alanyldopamine (NBAD) by Sarcophaga bullata was investigated. Incubation of NBAD with larval cuticular preparations resulted in the covalent bindings of NBAD to the cuticle and generation of N-beta-alanyl-norepinephrine (NBANE) as the soluble product. When the reaction was carried out in presence of a powerful quinone trap viz., N-acetylcysteine, NBANE formation was totally abolished; but a new compound characterized as NBAD-quinone-N-acetylcysteine adduct was generated. These results indicate that NBAD quinone is an obligatory intermediate for the biosynthesis of NBANE in sarcophagid cuticle. Accordingly, phenylthiourea--a well-known phenoloxidase inhibitor--completely inhibited the NBANE production even at 5 microM level. A soluble enzyme isolated from cuticle converted exogenously supplied NBAD quinone to NBANE. Chemical considerations indicated that the enzyme is an isomerase and is converting NBAD quinone to its quinone methide which was rapidly and nonenzymatically hydrated to form NBANE. Consistent with this hypothesis is the finding that NBAD quinone methide can be trapped as beta-methoxy NBAD by performing the enzymatic reaction in 10% methanol. Moreover, when the reaction was carried out in presence of kynurenine, two diastereoisomeric structures of papiliochrome II-(Nar-[alpha-3-aminopropionyl amino methyl-3,4-dihydroxybenzyl]-L-kynurenine) could be isolated as by-products, indicating that the further reactions of NBAD quinone methide with exogenously added nucleophiles are nonenzymatic and nonstereoselective. Based on these results, it is concluded that NBAD is metabolized via NBAD quinone and NBAD quinone methide by the action of phenoloxidase and quinone isomerase respectively. The resultant NBAD quinone methide, being highly reactive, undergoes nonenzymatic and nonstereoselective Michael-1,6-addition reaction with either water (to form NBANE) or other nucleophiles in cuticle to account for the proposed quinone methide sclerotization.  相似文献   

13.
1,2-dehydro-N-acetyldopamine (dehydro NADA) is an important catecholamine derivative formed during the sclerotization of insect cuticle. Earlier we have reported that tyrosinase-catalyzed oxidation of dehydro NADA produces a reactive quinone methide imine amide that forms adducts and cross-links through its side chain, thereby accounting for sclerotization reactions. Recently, laccase has also been identified as a key enzyme associated with sclerotization. Hence, we re-examined oxidation of dehydro NADA by tyrosinase and laccase using high performance liquid chromatography – tandem mass spectrometry. Tyrosinase-catalyzed oxidation of dehydro NADA not only generated dimers as reported earlier, but also generated significant amounts of oligomers. The course of laccase-catalyzed oxidation of dehydro NADA significantly differed from the tyrosinase reaction kinetically and mechanistically. Laccase failed to produce any detectable quinone or quinone methide as the primary two-electron oxidation product. Since laccases are known to generate primarily semiquinones as the initial products, lack of accumulation of two-electron oxidation products indicated that laccase reaction is primarily occurring via free radical coupling mechanism. Consistent with this proposal, laccase-catalyzed oxidation of dehydro NADA, resulted in the production of largely dimeric products and failed to produce any significant amount of oligomeric materials. These studies call for radical coupling as yet another major mechanism for sclerotization of insect cuticle.  相似文献   

14.
《Insect Biochemistry》1989,19(8):803-808
Insect cuticles catalyze the formation of N-acetylnorepinephrine (NANE) and N-β-alanylnorepinephrine (NBANE) from N-acetyldopamine (NADA) and N-β-alanyldopamine (NBAD), respectively. An enzyme, involved in the reaction, has now been isolated from fifth stage larval cuticle of Hyalophora cecropia and partially characterized. The enzyme alone has hardly any activity towards NADA, but together with diphenoloxidases [catechol oxidases (EC 1.10.3.1) or laccases (EC 1.10.3.2)] it will produce NANE as the main product from NADA, indicating that NADA-quinone is the actual substrate for the enzyme. The enzyme is presumably an ortho-quinone para-quinone methide isomerase, and formation of NANE is due to non-enzymatic addition of water to the quinone methide. The enzyme combination mushroom tyrosinase-cuticular isomerase has pH optimum at 5.5, and the optimal substrate concentration is about 10 mM NADA.Together with the endogenous cuticular diphenoloxidases the isomerase can account for the formation of NANE observed when pieces of intact cuticle are incubated with NADA, and for the presence of NANE and NBANE in sclerotized cuticle.The possible roles of the enzyme in sclerotization and defense reactions in insects are briefly discussed.  相似文献   

15.
An enzyme which catalyzes the conversion of certain 4-alkyl-o-benzoquinones to 2-hydroxy-p-quinone methides has been purified to apparent homogeneity from the hemolymph of Sarcophaga bullata by employing conventional protein purification techniques. The purified enzyme migrated with an approximate molecular weight of 98,000 on gel filtration chromatography. On sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, it migrated as a single band with a molecular weight of 46,000, indicating that it is made up of two identical subunits. It exhibited a pH optimum of 6.0 and readily converted chemically synthesized as well as enzymatically generated quinones derived from N-acetyldopamine, N-beta-alanyldopamine, and 3,4-dihydroxyphenethyl alcohol to highly unstable 2-hydroxy-p-quinone methides. The quinone methides thus formed were rapidly and nonenzymatically hydrated to form side chain hydroxylated o-diphenols as the stable product. In support of this proposition, when the enzyme reaction with N-acetyldopamine quinone was conducted in the presence of 10% methanol, racemic beta-methoxy-N-acetyldopamine was recovered as an additional product. The quinones of N-acetylnorepinephrine, N-beta-alanylnorepinephrine, and 3,4-dihydroxyphenylglycol were also attacked by the isomerase, resulting in the formation of N-acetylarterenone, N-beta-alanylarterenone and 2-hydroxy-3',4'-dihydroxyacetophenone, respectively as the stable products. The isomerase converted the dihydrocaffeiyl methyl amide quinone to its quinone methide analog which rapidly tautomerized to yield caffeiyl methyl amide. The importance of quinone isomerase in insect immunity and sclerotization of insect cuticle is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Insect phenoloxidases participate in three physiologically important processes, viz., cuticular hardening (sclerotization), defense reactions (immune reaction), and wound healing. Arrest or even delay of any of these processes compromises the survival of insects. Since the products of phenoloxidase action, viz., quinones, are cytotoxic, uncontrolled phenoloxidase action is deleterious to the insects. Therefore, the activity of this important enzyme has to be finely controlled. A novel inhibition of insect phenoloxidases, which serves as a new regulatory mechanism for control of its activity, is described. The activity of phenoloxidases isolated from both Sarcophaga bullata and Manduca sexta is drastically inhibited by quinone isomerase (isolated from Calliphora), an enzyme that utilizes the phenoloxidase-generated 4-alkylquinones. In turn, phenoloxidase reciprocated the inhibition of isomerase. By forming a complex and controlling each other's activity, these two enzymes seem to regulate the levels of endogenously quinones. In support of this contention, an endogenous complex consisting of phenoloxidase, quinone isomerase, and quinone methide isomerase was characterized from the insect, Calliphora. This sclerotinogenic complex was isolated and purified by borate extraction of the larval cuticle, ammonium sulfate precipitation, and Sepharose 6B column chromatography. The complex exhibited a molecular mass of about 620-680 kDa, as judged by size-exclusion chromatography on Sepharose 6B and HPLC and did not even enter 3% polyacrylamide gel during electrophoresis. The phenoloxidase activity of the complex exhibited a wide substrate specificity. Incubation of the complex with N-acetyldopamine rapidly generated N-acetylnorepinephrine, dehydro-N-acetyldopamine, and its dimers. In addition, transient accumulation of N-acetyldopamine quinone was also observed. These results confirm the presence of phenoloxidase, quinone isomerase, and quinone methide isomerase in the complex. Attempts to dissociate the complex with even trace amounts of SDS ended in the total loss of quinone isomerase activity. The complex does not seems to be made up of stoichiometric amounts of individual enzymes as the ratio of phenoloxidase to quinone isomerase varied from preparation to preparation. It is proposed that the complex formation between sequential enzymes of sclerotinogenic pathway is advantageous for the organism to effectively channel various reactive intermediates during cuticular hardening.  相似文献   

17.
The hemolymph of Sarcophaga bullata larvae was activated with either zymosan or proteolytic enzymes such as chymotrypsin or subtilisin and assayed for phenoloxidase activity by two different assays. While oxygen uptake studies readily attested to the wide specificty of activated phenoloxidase, visible spectral studies failed to confirm the accumulation of quinone products in the case of 4-alkyl substituted catechols such as N-acetyldopamine and N-β-alanyldopamine. Sepharose 6B column chromatography of the activated hemolymph resolved phenoloxidase activity into two fractions, designated as A and B. Peak A possessed typical o-diphenoloxidase (o-diphenol, oxygen oxidoreductase EC 1.10.3.1) activity, while peak B oxidized physiologically important catecholamine derivatives such as N-acetyldopamine, N-acetylnorepinephrine, and N-β-alanyldopamine into N-acetylnorepinephrine, N-acetylarterenone, and N-β-alanylnorepinephrine, respectively, and converted 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid, 3,4-dihydroxymandelic acid, and 3,4-dihydroxyphenylglycol into 3,4-dihydroxymandelic acid, 3,4-dihydroxybenzaldehyde, and 2-hydroxy-3′,4′-dihydroxyacetophenone, respectively. These transformations are consistent with the conversion of phenoloxidase-generated quinones to quinone methides and subsequent non-enzymatic transformations of quinone methides. Accordingly, Peak B contained both o-diphenoloxidase activity and quinone tautomerase activity. Sepharose 6B column chromatography of unactivated hemolymph resulted in the separation of quinone tautomerase from prophenoloxidase. The tautomerase rapidly converted both chemically made and mushroom tyrosinase-generated quinones to quinone methides. Thus the failure to observe the accumulation of quinones with N-acyl derivatives of dopamine and related compounds in the whole hemolymph is due to the rapid conversion of these long lived toxic quinones to short lived quinone methides. The latter, being unstable, undergo rapid non-enzymatic transformations to form side-chain-oxygenated products that are non-toxic. The possible roles of quinone isomerase and its reaction products—quinone methides—as essential components of sclerotization of cuticle and defense reaction of Sarcophaga bullata are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
N‐Acetyldopamine (NADA) is the major catechol in the hemolymph of nymphal and adult grasshoppers, Melanoplus sanguinipes (F.), and mainly occurs as an acid‐labile conjugate indicated to be a sulfate ester. Its concentration increases in last instar nymphs and peaks during adult cuticle sclerotization. Dopamine (DA), the precursor of NADA and melanic pigments, is about 10 times lower in concentration than NADA, but shows a similar pattern of accumulation. NADA also predominates in cuticle, but its concentration is lowest during the active period of sclerotization, reflecting its role as a precursor for quinonoid tanning agents. Two other catechols, 3,4‐dihydroxybenzoic acid (DOBA) and 3,4‐dihydroxyphenylethanol (DOPET), also occur in hemolymph and cuticle, and their profiles suggest a role in cuticle stabilization. Solid‐state NMR analysis of sclerotized grasshopper cuticle (fifth instar exuviae) estimated the relative abundances of organic components to be 59% protein, 33% chitin, 6% catechols, and 2% lipid. About 99% of the catechols are covalently bound in the cuticle, and therefore are involved in sclerotization of the protein‐chitin matrix. To determine the types of catechol covalent interactions in the exocuticle, samples of powdered exuviae were heated in Hcl under different hydrolytic conditions to release adducts and cross‐linked products. 3,4‐Dihydroxyphenylketoethanol (DOPKET) and 3,4‐dihydroxyphenylketoethylamine (arterenone) are the major hydrolysis products in weak and strong acid, respectively, and primarily represent NADA oligomers that apparently serve as cross‐links and filler material in sclerotized cuticle. Intermediate amounts of norepinephrine (NE) are released, which represent N‐acetylnorepinephrine (NANE), a hydrolysis product of NADA bonded by the b‐carbon to cuticular proteins and possibly chitin. Small quantities of histidyl‐DA and histidyl‐DOPET ring and side‐chain C‐N adducts are released by strong acid hydrolysis. Therefore, grasshopper cuticle appears to be sclerotized by both o‐quinones and p‐quinone methides of NADA and dehydro‐NADA, which results in a variety of C‐O and C‐N covalent bonds linked primarily through the side‐chain carbons of the catechol moiety to amino acid residues in cuticular proteins. The primary catechol extracted from both the female accessory glands/calyx and the proteinaceous frothy material of the egg pod is DOBA, which also commonly occurs in cockroach accessory glands and oothecae, presumably as a tanning agent precursor. 3,4‐Dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA) was also detected in extracts of the accessory glands/calyx of grasshoppers, and may serve as a precursor for DOBA synthesis. Arch. Insect Biochem. Physiol. 40:119–128, 1999. © 1999 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

19.
Two-electron oxidation of catecholamines either by phenol oxidase or by chemical oxidants such as sodium periodate produces their corresponding o-quinones as observable products. But, in the case of 1,2-dehydro-N-acetyldopamine, an important insect cuticular sclerotizing precursor, phenol oxidase catalyzed oxidation has been reported to generate a quinone methide analog as a transient, but first observable product. ?Sugumaran, M., Semensi, V., Kalyanaraman, B., Bruce, J. M., and Land, E. J. (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 10355-10361. The corresponding quinone has escaped detection until now. However, in this paper, for the first time, we present direct evidence for the formation of dehydro-N-acetyldopamine quinone and show that it can readily be produced from the tautomeric quinone methide imine amide during the chemical oxidation of dehydro-N-acetyldopamine under acidic conditions. This situation is in sharp contrast to other known alkyl-substituted catechol oxidations, where quinone is the first observable product and quinone methide is the subsequently generated product. Dehydro-N-acetyldopamine quinone thus formed is also highly unstable. Semiempirical molecular orbital calculation also indicates that quinone methide imine amide is more stable than the quinone. Chemical considerations indicate that the quinone methide tautomer, and not the dehydro-N-acetyldopamine quinone, is responsible for crosslinking the structural proteins and chitin polymer in the insect cuticle. Therefore, the quinone methide tautomer, and not the quinone, is the key reactive intermediate aiding the hardening of insect cuticle.  相似文献   

20.
《Insect Biochemistry》1990,20(7):745-750
The enzyme(s) responsible for the sclerotization of mantid ootheca is secreted by the left colleterial gland. From an extract of the glands of Tenodera aridifolia sinensis, two soluble enzyme fractions of different activities were obtained. One fraction acted on N-acetyldopamine (NADA), a precursor of a representative sclerotizing agent, and produced NADA-quinone. The other did not act on NADA itself but converted the quinone to a highly reactive intermediate, such as quinone methide, which was able to react nonenzymically with nucleophilic compounds. Other insoluble enzyme preparations obtained from the silk and pupal cuticle of the Japanese giant silk moth, Dictyoploca japonica, also had these two activities.  相似文献   

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